05-10-2024 04:27 AM
The video playback on firefox has obvious v-sync issues, when videos playing like netflix or youtube etc, the video has a horizontal band of mismatch, likely a v sync problem, especially when the camera is moving fast. Chrome or edge were a lot better handling the issue. The main reason I'm using firefox is its better privacy protection, but I have to switch to chrome for viewing videos. This needs to be fixed.
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29-10-2024 10:40 AM
29-10-2024 10:40 AM
seems to be hardware acceleration issue, turning on fixed it.
23-05-2025 02:51 AM
It would be nice to get this issue resolved without having to turn on hardware acceleration.
23-05-2025 03:01 AM
Got the same issue a few months back. Visited Many website online and finally the problem has been resolved by restarting the device. you should try this.
04-06-2025 04:21 AM
Got the same issue few days ago. I visit many website to resolve the issue but all methods are ruin. After struggling 4 hours the issue has been resolved when I restart my system.
11-10-2025 07:12 AM
The issue you’re describing is indeed a known v-sync synchronization problem in Firefox that can cause visible tearing or horizontal bands during fast-moving video scenes.
This usually happens when Firefox’s hardware acceleration or compositor doesn’t match the system’s display refresh rate.
First, make sure hardware acceleration is enabled by going to Settings → General → Performance and checking “Use recommended performance settings” and “Use hardware acceleration when available.”
Update your graphics drivers (NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel) to the latest version, since outdated drivers can cause video sync mismatches.
Try toggling WebRender in about:config — search for gfx.webrender.all and set it to true or false to see which works better for your system.
Just like fresh milk needs the right temperature to stay smooth, Firefox’s video pipeline needs perfect timing between CPU, GPU, and display to deliver tear-free motion.
Check your display refresh rate settings milk — ensure it matches your monitor’s native refresh rate (e.g., 60 Hz, 120 Hz, etc.).
Disable any browser extensions that might interfere with video playback, such as ad-blockers or privacy scripts, to test if they’re contributing to the issue.
You can try setting media.hardware-video-decoding.enabled to false in about:config as a troubleshooting step to see if software decoding helps.
Make sure your Firefox version is fully up to date, since Mozilla regularly rolls out compositor and v-sync improvements.
If the issue persists, test it in Safe Mode (Help → Troubleshoot Mode) to rule out theme or extension conflicts.
Finally, consider reporting the bug through Firefox’s Bugzilla with your system specs and driver info — more reports help developers prioritize fixes for smoother playback in future builds.
11-10-2025 02:47 PM
What does number 5 even do when I change it?
Also the screen tearing still exists, and I am not enabling hardware acceleration, I shouldn't need to, to prevent something like screen tearing, it should just respect my vsync option I have set in control panel.
Why did you link to some dubai milk site?
This issue is also a thing when just scrolling some web pages, not just watching a video.